The Nechoma Greisman Anthology
Section 9: NECHOMA AS OTHERS SAW HER An outstretched hand in the fog of confusion
This Is What I Want to Be
"...if this is how people turn out when they're frum, then this is
what I want to be..."
Soon after we heard the unbelievable news of Nechomie's petirah, a close
friend from the old days saw Rabbi Manis Friedman at a gathering in another city.
She asked him for some help in dealing with her feelings. He answered her with great
compassion "Special people have special lives."
In the benching, we ask that Hashem bless, "My mother, my teacher the
mistress of this house." Nechomie truly excelled in all these roles. This article
is a compilation of the reflections of the group of women whose gratitude to her
will always be without limit. The journey to Yiddishkeit for a Baal Teshuvah
is such a crucial period in their lives that every detail remains seared in one's
memory: We have a tremendous zechus, because Nechomie was our teacher.
Eighteen years ago we all spent a truly miraculous summer at Bais Chana in Minnesota.
Although our travels had taken us all over the globe, we were incredibly similar
in terms of background education and outlook, and we knew we were posed on the brink
of something very big and very special. Within days we felt as if we'd known each
other forever.
Nechomie was there that summer. Her life, obviously, had been vastly different.
We came from a world where advanced degrees and conferred status were the indication
of intellect, yet she had never even attended college. To top it off she was quite
a bit younger (in years only) than most of us. But despite these "differences" we
were all soon completely under her spell. She helped us through the complexities
of negel vasser and brochos on food with a directness and a warmth
that matter-of-factly did away with our fears. Nechomie did not have a judgmental
bone in her body. Of course this is one reason why she was the ultimate expression
of Ahavas Yisroel. For when there is no yesh, no ego, there can be
no separation between people.
Nechomie truly taught by example. She had the instinctive ability to fuse together
gashmius and ruchnius and thus live a truly Jewish life. The best
example of this is her freezerology. She was an expert in utilizing the freezer,
and this was not merely for the sake of being an efficient balabusta --
she strove to be an efficient balabusta only so that she could have more
time and energy for the truly important things in life, and yet not shortchange
her family and guests on nutrition and comfort. As she froze kugels and
challah dough and home-made baby food and went on to write articles about
it for N'shei Newsletter she did it l'Sheim Shamayim.
Her very presence in Minnesota that summer was really quite extraordinary. She
was already a Kallah, and it would have made sense to have her chassanah
before the summer. At a time when it is totally permissible to be absorbed in oneself
and the countless details of preparing for marriage, Nechomie consciously chose
to push off her chassanah and spend the summer in Bais Chana as a madrichah.
And then, when Nechomie returned to New York that Elul she told a relative that
she had gone to Minnesota expecting to give, but she had made a group of new friends
and she had gained much more from them. This is yet another example of how
she took every new person and experience as an opportunity to deepen her avodah.
It can honestly be said that at a certain point that summer we all made the ultimate
decision to change our lives forever because of her. Our reasoning went something
like this: "Wow -- if this is how people turn out when they're frum,
then this is what I want to be!" Pretty naive to think that just because we
kept Shabbos and covered our elbows that we would automatically transform ourselves
into her, but we all shared these feelings. Rabbi Friedman, with his brilliant psychological
discussions of Chassidus, convinced our intellects. But Nechomie won over
our hearts and souls to Yiddishkeit.
We could not omit the story of our first Tishrei experience in Crown Heights
because she is so completely interwoven with it. Those were the days before Rabbi
Mangel had completed the English-Hebrew Machzor, so the best one could do
was to purchase a Birnbaum English Machzor and to jump between that and the
Hebrew. Nechomie taught us at Machon Chana before the Yom Tovim, and she
translated the tefillahs and the "choreography" of the Davening as we dutifully
entered her words in our shiny new Machzorim.
Then came the actual experience of 770 during Tishrei. Once again Nechomie personified
the true spirit of Ahavas Yisroel. She took us under her wing, and literally
gave away her whole Davening. We were so confused and we really wanted to do everything
RIGHT and so we tugged at her sleeves like small children asking her to show us
the place, and to keep us posted. We had no idea that these were times she wasn't
supposed to speak or any thought that she might have kavanahs of her own
as she stood at the threshold of her marriage and new life. The Machzorim
that we held that year, and the memories of her infinite patience and bittul
during those days of Kedushah are things that we will always cherish.
Then came Nechomie's momentous move to Tsfas, and all of the successes and continued
growth that followed. Yet, whenever Nechomie managed to schedule a trip home, we
would always get together at some point and farbreng. Her beauty, the radiance
that was another of her special qualities, was ever more evident with each passing
year. And her tznius, of course, was always perfect. One farbrengen
stands out especially. Nechomie came in, and very animatedly began to share a Torah
thought with us before we had even held our "shmoozing time." She said that
she had never quite understood the phrase "the birth pangs of Mashiach,"
and that she had heard an explanation that had touched her deeply. She said that
the stage called "transition" that comes right before an actual birth, for the mother
is often a time of confusion and intensity that is accompanied by feelings of hopelessness
and anguish. But the midwife has another perspective, and because she sees physical
evidence of the baby's imminent arrival, she can offer strength and encouragement.
So it is with the final moments of golus. We sometimes give in to these "transition"
feelings, but B"H we have the Rebbe Shlita who actually sees Mashiach
coming and gives us the encouragement that we have truly almost done it! She shared
these words with us some three and a half years ago, and the world is now a different
place.
Our mission is clear. Each of us must try to emulate at least some aspect of
her remarkable way of life; there is surely no lack of choices. May our tears and
our tefillos reach the Heavenly Throne, so that Nechomie Greisman a"h
and all of those whom we love and miss can be back with their families IMMEDIATELY.
Sara Chana Schreiber
Crown Heights, Brooklyn |